Pope Francis has reaffirmed the Vatican’s assessment of the Leadership
Conference of Women Religious, which found it had “serious doctrinal
problems” and needed to be reformed.
Archbishop Gerhard L. Müller, the prefect for the Vatican’s doctrine
congregation, met in Rome with conference president Sister Florence
Deacon on April 15, along with Archbishop J. Peter Sartain of Seattle,
who was named to carry out the reform of the group.
Archbishop Müller told Sr. Deacon that he “recently discussed the
Doctrinal Assessment with Pope Francis, who reaffirmed the findings of
the Assessment and the program of reform for this Conference of Major
Superiors,” an April 15 statement from the congregation said.
“It is the sincere desire of the Holy See that this meeting may help to
promote the integral witness of women Religious,” the communiqué
stated, and this requires “a firm foundation of faith and Christian
love, so as to preserve and strengthen it for the enrichment of the
Church and society for generations to come.”
Since it was his first time meeting with the leadership of the group,
Archbishop Müller thanked the sisters for their “great contribution” to
the Church in the United States, “as seen particularly in the many
schools, hospitals, and institutions of support for the poor” that have
been founded and staffed by religious.
He also “emphasized that a Conference of Major Superiors, such as the
LCWR, exists in order to promote common efforts among its member
institutes as well as cooperation with the local Conference of Bishops
and with individual Bishops.
“For this reason, such Conferences are constituted by and remain under
the direction of the Holy See,” he stated, citing canons 708-709.
On April 18, 2012, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
revealed the findings a four-year doctrinal assessment of the
conference, which found “serious doctrinal problems” and the need for
reform.
It cited letters from LCWR officers as well as presentations sponsored
by the conference which exhibited “radical feminist themes incompatible
with the Catholic faith” and dissent from Church teaching on topics
including the sacramental male priesthood and homosexuality.
The assessment also noted that while the group adamantly promotes
social justice issues, it largely ignores matters of life, marriage and
sexuality, which have played a large role in recent public debates.
The leadership conference responded June 1 to the assessment,
describing it as being “based on unsubstantiated accusations” and using
“a flawed process that lacked transparency.”
At the same time that it announced its findings, the Vatican placed
Archbishop Sartain in charge of carrying out a reform of the group.
He has a five-year mandate to help the conference revise its statues
and review its connections to affiliated organizations. In addition, he
will help create a new formation program to offer a deeper understanding
of Church teaching and will be responsible for approving future
speakers and presentations at the organization’s assemblies.
Composed of some 1,500 members, the LCWR consists of about three
percent of the 57,000 women religious in the U.S. Because its members
are leaders of their religious communities, the group says that it
represents 80 percent of American sisters. The average age of its
members is 74.